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Wordle Hint #1827: How to solve today’s puzzle ending in E

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Today’s Wordle feels forgiving. It doesn’t try to trap you. The letters are common enough that even a bad starting guess usually saves your day. Still. If you are staring at that empty grid right now, wondering what comes next, we have you covered.

Let’s get to it.

How many vowels does Wordle #1827 contain?

Keep your eyes peeled for two vowels. Not three. Not four. Just two. This constraint usually kills off heavy hitters like “AUDIO” or “BEACH” before you even begin.

You also need to know that this answer has zero repeated letters. Every single slot is unique. That’s a big relief. No guessing the second ‘T’ or the hidden double ‘L’. The board is clean.

What are the best Wordle starters for today?

Don’t wing it. Pick a word that screams vowels and consonants you know show up constantly. Words with E, A, and R are your friends here.

Skip the Zs. Forget the J. Q is a gamble you don’t need on an easier day.

Here is how to play:
– Try ADIEU if you want to clear the vowels immediately.
– TRAIN is solid for R, T, and A coverage.
– CLOSE nets you an E, S, and L early.

Use these not as your final guess but as a filter. If ADIEU turns the D and E gray? You already know half your word isn’t there.

Wordle answer hints without the spoiler

First letter. D.
Last letter. E.

That’s _ _ _ _. No repeats. Two vowels inside the _ _ _ E frame.

What comes to mind when you hear D and think of a bird? Or something that flies but isn’t a plane?

Why “DRAKE” fits today’s puzzle

The answer is DRAKE.

It checks every box. It starts with D. It ends in E. It holds exactly two vowels (A and E). No letter is wasted twice. It refers to a male duck. Simple. Direct.

If you didn’t nail it on the first try, you were likely missing that semantic clue. The bird connection is subtle for people who don’t track waterfowl daily. But once you see it, you can’t unsee it.

Yesterday was EMOJI. Before that ENTRY. The streak of easy days is holding strong.

Do you usually check the male/female distinction for animal words? Maybe. Maybe not. It just means you needed a little help today. No shame. Move to tomorrow. The next word will be waiting. And it probably won’t be about poultry.